Shells new executive share buying rule is meant to restore confidence, but the competitive landscape shows a deeper reality. While Shell focuses on optics, its rivals are strengthening their business models with moves that directly affect margins, supply security, and long term growth.
Petron Corporation
Petron remains the only major oil company in the Philippines with an operating refinery. This single fact gives Petron a level of control and resilience that Shell no longer has. The Bataan refinery allows the company to refine crude, manage product blends, and capture value across multiple stages of the petroleum chain. Petron also retains diversified businesses in industrial fuels, aviation, and LPG, supported by strong storage capacity and a nationwide logistics backbone. These strengths allow Petron to cushion volatility in global oil markets, a protection Shell lost when it exited refining.
Unioil
Unioil has built its success on strategic partnerships and a strong supply advantage. A major part of this is its long standing supply relationship with Aramco, the largest oil company in the world. This partnership gives Unioil access to stable, high quality fuel supply at competitive terms and allows it to consistently offer Euro five and Euro six compliant fuels earlier than many competitors. Unioil has also invested in station expansion, flexible franchising, and solar powered facilities, and it has begun exploring electric vehicle charging stations. These steps give Unioil a strong environmental brand and operational efficiency that directly challenge Shell in urban and premium markets.
Caltex under Chevron
Caltex continues to rely on Chevrons global trading and supply operations to maintain a stable flow of high quality fuel. It invests steadily in station upgrades, maintains strong loyalty programs, and generates meaningful margins from its lubricants segment. Caltex remains a balanced player with both brand equity and operational strength.
Independent Players
Independent operators such as Petro Gazz continue to expand rapidly with low pump prices and cost attractive franchise models. They dominate in provincial markets and logistics corridors by offering affordability and location convenience rather than legacy branding. Their presence compresses margins for all major players.
The Strategic Gap
The issue for Shell is not the executive share purchase rule. The issue is that its competitors are playing on wider and stronger foundations. Petron enjoys vertical integration. Caltex has global supply muscle. Unioil has a strategic link to Aramco and a clear clean fuel positioning. Independent players have captured the price sensitive segment. Shell stands in the middle of all of this with a narrower business and without a compelling growth story.
Until Shell develops a credible plan for new energy businesses, supply resilience, and mobility ecosystems, moves like executive share buying will remain symbolic. Investors will continue to favor competitors whose strategies directly translate into value, volume, and long term relevance.
